Friday, June 20, 2008
South Africa is losing professionals in droves as they up stakes and move to work in other countries.
Newspapers such as South Africa's The Times are coming out with some statistics that should make the country quake: an estimated one qualified engineer is leaving every day (according to The Engineering Council of South Africa) and in a survey of 1700 health professionals, half of them hope to leave the country within five years.

Crime, career prospects, earning power, the Eskom power crunch and schooling (some students are barred entry into university because of the  race quotas) are the reasons for professionals leaving; also applications for business visas have soared, meaning entrepreneurs are taking their inspiration – and cash – elsewhere..

All this is good news for immigration consultants and removals companies, who report business is up by, in some cases, 600% over last year.
Australia is top of the list in terms of favoured destination, but professionals are apparently becoming less fussy over where they end up – and desirable countries include New Zealand, Canada, Britain and the US.
South Africa's loss is Britain's gain because, like all EU countries, it needs professionals, particularly in IT, engineering and the health services.
The EU needs an estimated 20m extra workers to fill gaps in industry, and is introducing a blue card work permit scheme to make it easier for skilled professionals to immigrate. A global survey of 750 CIOs and CEOs in February 2008 said biggest worry is staffing problems and a crisis in IT skills.

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